Hermann Rorschach, a Swiss Freudian psychiatrist, is best known for inventing the Rorschach test. Though certain parts of society are more familiar with the name when in context of Watchmen’s anti-hero Rorschach, who wore a shifting inkblot test mask, Hermann Rorschach developed the famed inkblot test that was worn on that very mask.

It was designed to reflect unconscious parts of a test subject’s personality. See an attractive man or woman in the blobs of ink? You might have sex or relationships on the mind. See a horrific scene of crime and gore? There’s a chance you should attend therapy sessions on a regular basis. Though the test doesn’t reveal all, it’s generally though to be a helpful guide.

The Google Doodle — as is generally the case with these logos — is well-illustrated and animated. It takes the black-and-white aesthetics of an inkblot test itself to depict a therapist’s office — the windows and wall-hangings spelling out the Google name.

The Doodle is actually in the first-person perspective, as if we internet citizens are holding up the cards with our own to hands and peering into the inky abyss. Clicking on the inkblot card (or the arrows flanking it) cycles through various images — some nondescript, some very obviously lighthearted jokes included by Google, such dinosaurs standing atop rolling balls or a cat with a butterfly above its head.

Or maybe that’s just what I saw.

After years of testing the inkblot tests, Rorschach wrote Psychodiagnostik in 1921, which is the book that described how the tests can be effectively used in psychoanalysis. He didn’t even get to live in the glory of his book for a whole year, as he unfortunately died of a ruptured appendix. Now we’ll never know what he saw in Rorschach’s ever-changing mask.